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. 1981 Jun;161(2):169-87.
doi: 10.1002/aja.1001610204.

Species variation in the structure and function of the marginal zone--an electron microscope study of cat spleen

Species variation in the structure and function of the marginal zone--an electron microscope study of cat spleen

J Blue et al. Am J Anat. 1981 Jun.

Abstract

The marginal zone in the cat spleen consisted of a characteristic mixture of lymphocytes and other blood cells located mainly between the several layers of circumferential reticulum around white pulp. A region of fine-meshed reticulum between white pulp and red pulp, as present in some species, was absent from the cat spleen. Arterial capillaries to the marginal zone were few. Some were continuations of white pulp capillaries, whereas others were red pulp capillaries that likely were continuations of axial capillaries of periarterial macrophage sheaths (PAMS) (ellipsoids). Blood cells deposited in the marginal zone could reach red pulp by passing through the numerous openings in each layer of circumferential reticulum. Lymphocytes appeared to migrate across the marginal zone both toward and away from white pulp. Macrophages lying on the circumferential reticulum of the marginal zone phagocytized cells but did not ingest Thorotrast, although it coated their surfaces. Because of the scarcity of arterial endings and the lack of a macrophage-charged reticular meshwork, the marginal zone in cat spleen is not a major site of blood clearance and phagocytosis. These functions are better served in PAMS and red pulp.

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